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#501339 - 11/03/20 04:01 PM
Use left handed WITH your arranger?
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/02/04
Posts: 7305
Loc: Lexington, Ky, USA
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I stopped using arranger automatic functions in live work many years ago, but I do use my Ketron for speck work and initial conceptuals on film scores.
It works GREAT! I choose a workable tempo and, instead of using the stock intro's and endings, I use the drum track, the break function and embellish the intros, exits, etc. with a left-handed bass intro or ending. I always keep a keyboard on top with a really good finger bass setting. Sometimes, on live gigs, I use the arranger with the Hammond on top, with at least the auto bass off. That lets me embellish passing chords, sweeten endings and retard things like walks between cord changes.
I think this would work for a traditional arranger player. Just put a 2nd keyboard on top, stop the drums at an appropriate time and finish with a bass finish and right hand embellishes.
Practice is easy. Find a nice groove, turn off arranger functions, hold sustained right hand chords and concentrate on the bass line and embellishes. After you get comfortable, add additional right hand embellishments.
Maybe while we are all waiting out the virus, this would be a time passer and it could improve your over-all performance.
Play on!
R.
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#501398 - 11/09/20 02:07 PM
Re: Use left handed WITH your arranger?
[Re: montunoman]
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Member
Registered: 03/22/17
Posts: 449
Loc: Mountain Home, AR
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So where do I go to learn how to play bass on keyboard? I know most of my chords and can play root and fifths no problem, but what notes do you use when moving from chord to chord? As someone said in another post the arranger has no way of knowing what the next chord will be. So are there certain rules to use when going from one chord to another?
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PSR 740,PSR 3000, Mirage, tx7, mp32, Pro Tools 10,11 SONAR, Reaper, BIAB 2020 and a pile of Computer Music mags w/disks College student was working on Doctoral, Education Now just doing courses to do courses
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#501409 - 11/10/20 01:07 PM
Re: Use left handed WITH your arranger?
[Re: captain Russ]
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/02/04
Posts: 7305
Loc: Lexington, Ky, USA
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One good way to get started is look at walking bass lines. To get from C to F, for instance, walk from C to E to F. O, C, G, F#, F.
Listen to traditional groove organ player...Jimmy Smith, Richard "Groove" Holmes, Joey D and lots of others.
Diki hit the nail on the head. A real bass player (either on keyboards or other bass note generating device) can retard the tempo between chord changes, effect breaks between changes...lots of thinks the auto bass function is not programmed to do until the current chord, from which the computer operates, is fingered.
I have often turned everything off except the drum breaks, which I operate with the Ketron pedal board. Mostly, I stop the drum track, which turns off the auto bass, and finish with left handed bsss endings. Same thing for intros.
Sure breaks up the monotony of the two endings and intros programmed into the machine.
When I get bored, I go to the instrument storage area, and pick a keyboard (sometimes a drum machine) and a guitar I haven't used for a while.
Right now, when I go out, I am partial to using an ?SD-5 for drums and a Hammond SKS (I think) on top for Hammond draw bar sound, left handed bass...it even has a great Rhodes sound.
A few weeks ago, I put a melodica on the right, over a Roland synth and used a tube with mouthpiece into an old high impedance Shure 585. Finding a cord, which screws into the bsse of the microphone and has a 1/4" on the other end is a bear.
For performers, using a left-handed bass line, even sparingly, does a lot to make for more engaging performances.
Even after all these years, MUSIC IS FABULOUS!
Play on, friends,
Russ
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